Bobby Shmurda Takes Seven-Year Plea Deal In Conspiracy Case

Bobby Shmurda Takes Seven-Year Plea Deal In Conspiracy Case

Rapper Bobby Shmurda pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges Friday and will be heading up the river for seven years.

Shmurda, whose real name is Ackquille Pollard, took the deal just days before he was set to stand trial on conspiracy and weapons charges in Manhattan Supreme Court.

Prosecutors had maintained the “Shmoney Dance” phenom was the “driving force” behind a street crew called called GS9 that was responsible for dealing drugs and several shootings in Brooklyn.

He pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy and one count of criminal possession of a weapon.

The possession charge stemmed from a June 3, 2014 arrest for a gun found at a pal’s apartment in Brooklyn. He told cops at the time it was rap video prop. “I use my gun for videos- I’m a rapper,” he said, according to court papers.

In court Friday, he pleaded guilty to having possessed a loaded gun with the intent to use it “unlawfully against another.”

After serving the fixed seven year term, Shmurda, 22, will be on probation for five years, according to the terms of the plea agreement worked out with the Special Narcotics Prosecutor’s office.

He faced up to 25 years to life in prison had he been convicted at trial.

Two of his GS9 co-defendants, Chad (Rowdy Rebel) Marshall, 24, and Nicholas (Montana Flea) McCoy, 21, also took the same deal after loudly debating it with their lawyers in the courtroom for about 20 minutes.

“It’s seven years, seven years,” one of them was heard saying as all three were shaking their heads.

McCoy’s lawyer, Leslie Jones Thomas, told the group, “You won’t have a future if you don’t take it. Don’t throw your life away.”

A fourth defendant who was facing more charges, Santino (Cueno) Broderick, was offered a 15 year deal. He was overheard telling his lawyer, “Fifteen? Dang. My life is over.” “You want 80 or you want 15,” his lawyer Kevin Canfield told him, referring to how much time the 23-year-old could face if convicted at trial. Broderick turned down the deal, and will stand trial next week.